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‘A shared culture of resistance’: Pinarayi, Stalin commemorate Vaikom Satyagraha

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Rights
“Our children who attended the event will now tell posterity about it, and keep alive the memory of the Satyagraha for another 100 years,” said Vijayakumari, one of the attendees of the inauguration.
From left to right: MP Thomas Chazhikadan, Ministers Antony Raju and VN Vasavan, Chief Ministers Pinarayi Vijayan and MK Stalin, and Minister Saji Cherian
Pinarayi Vijayan / Twitter
The centenary celebrations of the Vaikom Satyagraha were jointly inaugurated by Kerala and Tamil Nadu Chief Ministers Pinarayi Vijayan and MK Stalin on Saturday, April 1, 2023. The centenary celebrations will last for the next 603 days and will involve various commemorative events. The Satyagraha, a non-violent protest demanding access for lowered castes to the roads surrounding the Vaikom Sree Mahadeva temple, had begun a century ago on March 30, 1924, and lasted till November 29, 1925. It had come more than six decades after the princely state of Travancore officially declared its roads open for people of all castes in 1865. Even then, access to public roads had only remained on paper, and it was the people’s movement in Vaikom that finally opened them up to lowered caste persons. On April 1, one only had to flow with the crowd on the streets of Vaikom, from the town’s Valiyakavala junction towards the boat jetty where the inauguration was held. Tens of thousands of people, young and old alike, arrived in Vaikom on Saturday afternoon to attend the inauguration of the centenary celebrations. Many had come just to catch a glimpse of the two chief ministers. As Stalin and Pinarayi rose to speak, the crowd that spilled over from the seating area climbed on desks and barricades, craning their necks and holding out their phone cameras to capture the moment. People head to the Vaikom boat jetty, where the event was held. A poster of TK Madhavan is seen CM Stalin opened his speech with a salutation for “my brothers and sisters of Kerala who speak Malayalam, a language that belongs to the Dravidian family.” He recounted how the two chief ministers had met in Nagercoil less than a month ago during the bicentenary celebration of the Nadar women’s struggle for the right to cover their breasts. It was at the March 6 meeting that Pinarayi extended a welcome to Stalin to the Vaikom centenary inauguration. The Kerala CM had, on the occasion, said that the breast tax was a tool used by the Sanatana Dharma to divide people.  Read: A look at the history of the Channar Revolt as Pinarayi, Stalin commemorate it Periyar’s role in Vaikom Satyagraha  “The protests in Vaikom in 1924 did not just impact the social justice movement in Kerala, but also in Tamil Nadu and in India as a whole,” Stalin noted. He said that the success of the Vaikom Satyagraha was the result of the efforts of social reformers from both states — Periyar EV Ramaswami Naicker from Tamil Nadu, and TK Madhavan from Kerala. “Thanthai Periyar is a global leader,” he said. Stalin also spoke at length about Periyar’s contributions to the cause, including his period of incarceration and KP Kesava Menon’s book that recorded the Dravida leader’s role. Kesava Menon was one of the leaders from Kerala who launched the Vaikom Satyagraha.  Indian independence activist and Congress leader George Joseph was instrumental in bringing Periyar, the then president of the Madras Presidency Congress Committee, to Vaikom. Periyar was part of the Vaikom struggle for 114 days, 74 of which he spent in jail. As author and historian Pazha. Athiyaman writes, “To mobilise support, [Periyar] visited villages in and around Vaikom and delivered public speeches in several towns. His campaign tour stretched to Thiruvananthapuram and even further to Nagercoil.” “Self-respect, rationality, socialism, equality, humanism, non-discrimination on the basis of blood and gender, women empowerment, social justice, scientific temper, and secularism were the ideals that Periyar upheld,” Stalin listed in his inaugural speech. He concluded his address by stressing on the importance of such an event in a political atmosphere where proponents of Sanatana Dharma and communal forces are gaining strength. Statues of leaders of the Vaikom Satyagraha Kunjappi, Bahuleyan, Govinda Panicker, Amachadi Thevan, and Raman Elayath, at Valiyakavala, Vaikom A watershed in Kerala’s history of social reform movements  Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan began his inaugural address by describing the Vaikom Satyagraha as an unparalleled protest movement in Indian history. “I call it an unparalleled protest on the basis of factual historical contexts. The strongest link in the chain of renaissance movements that shaped Kerala, like the breast cloth struggles, the Aruvippuram Movement (led by social reformer Sree Narayana Guru who consecrated a Siva idol in Aruvippuram in defiance of Brahmin authority), Villuvandi Samaram or bullock-cart struggle (led by anti-caste revolutionary Ayyankali for access to public roads for lowered castes), Guruvayur Satyagraha (a protest demanding entry into the Guruvayur Temple), and others, is the Vaikom Satyagraha,” he said. According to him, what makes the Vaikom Satyagraha stand apart is the fact that it was the first time that Kerala’s renaissance movement and India’s independence movement came together. “Until the Vaikom Satyagraha, Kerala’s social renaissance movement had been carried out in isolation from the freedom movement. If it hadn’t been for the influences of [Kerala social reformers] Sree Narayana Guru, Chattambi Swamikal, and Ayyankali, a satyagraha like the one at Vaikom would not have been possible. TK Madhavan, Narayana Guru’s disciple and Congress leader, played a crucial role in connecting it to the national movement,” Pinarayi said.  Madhavan was at the forefront of the Satyagraha, and played a crucial role in bringing Gandhi to Kerala for the first time, in connection with the protests in Vaikom. A year earlier, at the Indian National Congress’s Kakinada session in Andhra Pradesh, Madhavan had moved a resolution against untouchability.  Pinarayi called the Satyagraha a war cry against the “rot in social systems based on the principle of Chaturvarna.” Tamil Nadu and Kerala’s ‘fraternal populations’ Recounting the role of Periyar and other Tamil leaders in the Vaikom Satyagraha, Pinarayi said that the people of Kerala and Tamil Nadu are fraternal populations united by the same “culture of resistance.” “The Satyagraha set an example to stand united in resistance. Standing on the soil of Vaikom, let me say that this unity will continue in the coming years and will be further strengthened. This unity will be a significant example to the country itself,” the Kerala CM said.   Pinarayi also said that the Vaikom Satyagraha disproves the allegation that political parties played no role in Kerala’s renaissance movements. “The present governments of both Kerala and Tamil Nadu were formed from organisations that were involved in the reform movements of both states in the early 20th century,” he notes. “We live in a time when the Constitution and the values of the freedom movement are under threat. There are efforts to replace our Constitution with the teachings of Manusmriti… There are forces that block the progressive growth of our society. We should be able to identify and overcome them. We should focus on tackling larger dangers and not be stuck on small differences,” Pinarayi said. The audience that had gathered to hear the chief ministers The importance of remembering As most of the crowd dissipated after the chief ministers’ speeches, a few small groups gathered on the grounds. A group of senior citizens, all natives of Vaikom, spoke to TNM about the event they had just witnessed. “This is a very important event. The Vaikom Satyagraha needs to be remembered and spoken about. More than that, it needs to be included in our school curricula and taught to the coming generations. The young should grow up knowing about the caste injustices that were perpetrated in this land, and the struggles led against it,” one of them said.  In the group was KK Jayappan, Vaikom town secretary of the Sree Narayana Dharma Paripalana Yogam (SNDP). He spoke about how the Dalavakulam massacre found no mention in the speeches of either Pinarayi or Stalin. The Dalavakulam massacre took place in 1806, when around 200 unarmed Ezhava men who were leading a peaceful protest against untouchability and demanding entry rights into the Vaikom temple were butchered by the Travancore Diwan Velu Thampi Dalava’s Nair brigade and thrown in the temple’s eastern pond.  “If Dalavakulam was to be mentioned, the Ezhava community had to be mentioned. It could have been a conscious choice made to not mention the community,” he suggested. Anil, Sunitha, Leela and Suraja Chandran, who were with him, agreed. However, both Leena Kumari and Thankamma TP, who spoke to TNM at length about the cruelties at Dalavakulam, had a simpler explanation. They believe that it is not the chief ministers who are at fault for the omission, but the officers who helped draft their speeches. When asked if they thought the history of the Vaikom Satyagraha is known as much as it should be, Leena said, “Those who write history will only write their versions. Much of what actually happened is not passed down to the common people.” Two young Vaikom natives who spoke to TNM, Akhil P Mohan and Sujith K Ajith, said that the centenary celebrations offered a chance to know the history of the Satyagraha in greater detail. “I have heard about the Vaikom Satyagraha from the time I was a child. But now, once the preparations for the centenary began, conversations about the Satyagraha gained more currency. More resources also became available online, and I learned many more details about it,” Akhil said. The Vaikom boat jetty, where the centenary celebrations were inaugurated on April 1 For Sujith, the inauguration was an opportunity to catch a glimpse of two leaders he admires – Pinarayi and Stalin. “Communal forces are gaining strength across the country. As someone who is opposed to communal politics, I believe the coming together of the two chief ministers is an important signal,” he said. While Akhil and Sujith also stressed on the need to teach their town’s history to the younger generation, Sujith’s young nephew who had accompanied the two men told TNM that he knew neither what the Vaikom Satyagraha meant nor who the leaders who had come to the event were. When TNM approached Saddam Hussein and Thasni, both Vaikom residents, to know what they thought of the event, they said that they had come to attend it as it is rare that their town hosts such a large event. They also stressed that the commemoration of the historic movement was crucial. They too spoke of the importance of teaching history to the younger generations of Vaikom. “Everything is political,” Saddam said, speaking on the significance of the presence of the two chief ministers at the event. Vijayakumari Shaji, Shobhana Padmanabhan, and several other members of Kudumbashree units in Kaduthuruthy were waiting for their bus back home when they spoke to TNM about the historic significance of the event they had just witnessed. “We first heard of the Vaikom Satyagraha from our grandparents’ generation, who had lived through the times when the struggles took place. Our young children who attended the event today will now tell posterity about this large event that they attended with their mothers, and keep alive the memory of the Satyagraha for another 100 years,” Vijayakumari said.    Also read: Pinarayi and Stalin: The two lowered caste CMs striving to preserve an anti-caste memory

Makers of ‘Neelavelicham’ say they obtained rights to reuse MS Baburaj’s songs

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Mollywood
Three songs from the 1964 film ‘Bhargavinilayam’, composed by MS Baburaj and written by P Bhaskaran, have been reused in the upcoming ‘Neelavelicham’, directed by Aashiq Abu.
Rima, Shine Tom, Tovino and Roshan are in the poster in varied poses
Two days after receiving a legal notice, the team behind Neelavelicham, an upcoming Malayalam film, released a statement. The notice was regarding three songs used in the film, which were originally from the 1964 movie Bhargavi Nilayam. Aashiq Abu, the director and co-producer of Neelavelicham, said in the statement that the team had received the necessary rights and permission to recreate and reuse the older songs. Both Neelavelicham and Bhargavinilayam are movies based on a story written by legendary writer Vaikom Muhammed Basheer. Three of the original songs in Bhargavi Nilayam, which have been celebrated as masterpieces of the late composer MS Baburaj, with lyrics penned by the great writer P Bhaskaran, have been reused in Neelavelicham, composed by Bijibal. These are ‘Thamasamenthe Varuvan’, ‘Anuraga Madhuchashakam’ and ‘Ekanthathayude Mahatheeram’. A few days ago, family members of Baburaj sent a legal notice to Aashiq Abu and Bijibal against the manner in which these songs were reused. “For the family, the concern is in the way these songs have been remixed for the new film. These were timeless classics and they fear the [beauty of the] original composition will be lost by the remixing,” says Advocate Rafeeque NVP, who sent the legal notice for the family. Neelavelicham, starring actors Rima Kallingal, Tovino Thomas and Roshan Mathew, is produced by OPM Cinemas, owned by Rima Kallingal and Aashiq Abu. The production company, in its statement, said that it obtained the rights to use the songs “from both the lyricist P Bhaskaran, and the descendants of the music director, MS Baburaj, who were authorised to grant them.” Stating that they followed all legal procedures, signed an agreement and paid the compensation to get the rights and reproduce the songs, the producers added that they have all the documents and records. “As a tribute to the esteemed musician MS Baburaj, who created these songs, we had duly informed Sabira, his eldest daughter, of our intention to reproduce them for use in our film Neelavelicham. We only began the project after receiving her wishes, affection, and consent. We believe that the current disputes surrounding this matter stem from mere misunderstanding and lack of understanding of the facts,” the producers stated. They are in talks with the family to amicably settle the matter, they stated. 

Pregnant woman’s suicide in Kerala: Husband arrested for abetment

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Crime
Asmina’s husband Jamsheer was arrested under IPC sections 306 (abetment of suicide) and 498A (husband or relative of husband of a woman subjecting her to cruelty).
Kerala woman Asmina who committed suicide and her husband Jamsheer
Jamsheer and Asmina
The husband of 28-year-old Asmina, who died by suicide last month in Kerala’s Kozhikode due to alleged domestic violence, was arrested by the Thottipalam police on Saturday, April 1. Jamsheer was arrested under IPC sections 306 (abetment of suicide) and 498A (husband or relative of husband of a woman subjecting her to cruelty). His mother Nafeesa surrendered before the police following his arrest. Asmina, a mother of two girls who was five months pregnant, died by suicide on March 13. According to the First Information Report, she took her own life due to physical and mental torture by her husband’s mother and sisters. However, later the role of Jamsheer, who is an autorickshaw driver, in the domestic torture also came up. Jamsheer’s family lives at Karikkadanpoyil near Thaliyil in Kozhikode district. Asmina belonged to Narikattery near Nadapuram in the district. An action committee in the name of ‘Justice for Asmina’ was formed by the local residents because of the alleged delay by the police in acting on a complaint filed by her sister Sherfina. The committee organised a mass gathering seeking justice for Asmina at the Lower Primary school at Devarkovil, near Jamsheer’s house on March 31. Speaking to TNM, the action committee general convener MK Sasi alleged, “Asmina was physically abused by Jamsheer and his mother and two sisters. Asmina’s eight-year-old daughter has even testified that Asmina was physically abused by her grandmother and aunts. Asmina’s treatment at Jamsheer’s house was brutal from the beginning as his family expected more dowry. Asmina was from a poor family of six children and father is a taxi driver. Initially, Jamsheer did not abuse her, but later he also joined his mother and sisters. The latest falling out between husband and wife began as Asmina was opposed to him working only in the night.” Asmina had reportedly texted Jamsheer before her death that she was “going up”. “Jamsheer did not inform anyone at that time, but reached home to check,” Sasi added. The police refuted the action committee’s allegations of laxity in taking action. “Such allegations are raised without examining the truth,” the Deputy Superintendent of Police (DySP) of Nadapuram Latheesh said. He added that Jamsheer was arrested as prima facie it was found that there was domestic violence. He added that they are investigating if Jamsheer’s sisters also were involved in the domestic abuse. If you are aware of anyone facing mental health issues or feeling suicidal, please provide help. Here are some helpline numbers of suicide-prevention organisations that can offer emotional support to individuals and families. Tamil Nadu State health department's suicide helpline: 104 Sneha Suicide Prevention Centre - 044-24640050 (listed as the sole suicide prevention helpline in Tamil Nadu) Andhra Pradesh Life Suicide Prevention: 78930 78930 Roshni: 9166202000, 9127848584 Karnataka Sahai (24-hour): 080 65000111, 080 65000222 Kerala Maithri: 0484 2540530 Chaithram: 0484 2361161 Both are 24-hour helpline numbers. Telangana State government's suicide prevention (tollfree): 104 Roshni: 040 66202000, 6620200 SEVA: 09441778290, 040 27504682 (between 9 am and 7 pm Aasara offers support to individuals and families during an emotional crisis, for those dealing with mental health issues and suicidal ideation, and to those undergoing trauma after the suicide of a loved one.     24x7 Helpline: 9820466726  Click here for working helplines across India. 

Kerala makes masks mandatory for high-risk categories as COVID-19 cases rise

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COVID-19
According to data from the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, active cases in Kerala rose by 578 to 4,953 on April 1. The total number of active cases in India is 18389.
Close up of a a blue N95 mask worn on a person's face
The Kerala government has made face masks mandatory for people with comorbidities, pregnant women, children and the elderly, in light of the increased number of COVID-19 cases. The State's health department has released a few guidelines after the active cases rose by several hundred on a single day. According to data from the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, active cases in Kerala rose by 578 to 4,953 on April 1. The total number of active cases in India is 18,389. As per the guidelines from Kerala Health Minister Veena George’s office, no hospital in the state is to deny treatment to COVID-19 patients, and separate beds are to be prepared for them. The samples of the patients should be sent for whole genome sequencing from every district. The guidelines stress that people who suffer from diabetes, blood pressure, cancer, heart or kidney diseases and lung ailments should wear masks in public places and hospitals. Pregnant women, children and elderly people have also been advised to do that. People accompanying patients to hospitals must also wear masks. So should health workers in hospitals. Those aged above 60 and having co-morbidities should take RT PCR tests if they show signs of influenza or other symptoms of COVID-19. ASHA workers and field workers have been entrusted in checking on pregnant women for signs of the disease and ensuring timely treatment. The need for awareness on taking vaccination and precautions against COVID-19 has also been stressed in the guidelines. It also says that a patient who requires treatment for COVID-19 should be able to get it, and a fixed number of beds should be arranged in both government and private hospitals for the pandemic. If patients who are admitted in hospitals for other reasons test positive for the coronavirus, they should be treated in the same hospital. District Medical Officers should ensure that all hospitals follow this.

Man dies of suspected food poisoning in Kerala's Thrissur

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Health
The deceased identified as Saseendran, along with his two family members and two workers, had consumed idlis for breakfast and a detailed probe is underway.
Saseendaran, the person who died of suspected food poisoning
Reporterlive
A 57-year-old man has died of suspected food poisoning in Thrissur district of Kerala, while four others have been admitted to the hospital. The deceased has been identified as Saseendran of Avanoor. His wife Geetha, mother Ambuja, and two workers, who were at his home, are admitted to the hospital. The condition of one of the workers is said to be serious. Police said that Saseendran, who lives near the Thrissur government medical college, went out of his home on a two-wheeler and reached an ATM counter adjacent to the medical college. He collapsed while in the ATM and people, including some doctors who were sitting at a coffee shop near the counter, immediately rushed him to the Medical College hospital. However, he did not respond to treatment and died immediately. The four had consumed idlis for breakfast and a probe is on whether any poisonous material had entered their bodies. His son, who did not consume the idlis for breakfast, is not affected. Police said that a detailed probe would be conducted involving all aspects and added that the son of the deceased Saseendran is under the police scanner.

Man allegedly sets fire to co-passenger on train in Kerala, three found dead

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Accident
The bodies of three people were found hours after a man allegedly tried to set fire to a co-passenger on the Alappuzha-Kannur Executive Express, injuring eight others.
Police after a man allegedly set fire to a co-passenger on a Kerala train
Credit: ReporterLive
Three people, including a two-year-old child and a woman, were found dead on a railway track at the Elathur railway station in Kerala’s Kozhikode in the late hours of Sunday night, April 2. Hours earlier, a man on board the Alappuzha-Kannur Executive Express allegedly tried to set fire to a co-passenger, resulting in eight people being injured. According to Mathrubhumi, the police said that the three people who were found dead on the track went missing from the train after the fire incident on Sunday. Mathrubhumi reported that when the Alappuzha-Kannur Executive Express reached the Korapuzha Railway Bridge, an unidentified passenger poured inflammable liquid on a co-passenger which resulted in at least eight people on the train suffering from burn injuries. The perpetrator escaped immediately while the injured persons were taken to a nearby hospital after one of the passengers pulled the emergency chain. According to the police, one of the injured men was looking for his wife and child. Once the train reached Kannur, the passengers filed a complaint stating that a woman and child were missing after the incident. The woman’s mobile phone and footwear were reportedly found by the passengers on the train. The police inspected the tracks after they received a complaint regarding the missing persons and found three people dead on the railway track, including the missing woman and child. Mathrubhumi reported that the police were suspicious that the woman and child must have fallen off the train or attempted to get down as it was moving after the fire incident. The police also said that they have CCTV visuals of the suspect and an investigation to catch the perpetrator is underway. 

Former Kerala High Court Chief Justice Thottathil B Radhakrishnan passes away

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Death
During his long career, Thottathil B Radhakrishnan was the former Chief Justice of the High Courts of Calcutta, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Chhattisgarh.
Chief Justice Thottathil B Radhakrishnan
Former High Court Chief Justice Thottathil B Radhakrishnan passed away on Monday, April 3, at a hospital in Kochi. The 63-year-old had been ailing from cancer. Radhakrishnan, who began his career as a lawyer in 1983, was the former Chief Justice of the High Courts of Calcutta, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Chhattisgarh. He was elevated as a judge of the Kerala High Court in 2004, and was appointed as the Acting Chief Justice in 2016 and 2017. In July, 2018, Radhakrishnan was sworn in as the Chief Justice of the High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad for the states of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh. But before this, for a brief period in March 2018 he was appointed as the Chief Justice in Chhattisgarh High Court. He was sworn-in as the first Chief Justice of the Telangana High Court in 2019. On April 4, 2019, he took oath as the Chief Justice of the Calcutta High Court, a post which he occupied until his retirement in April, 2021, after which he returned and was leading a retired life here.

Arson attack on Kerala train left three dead, eight injured, says Railways

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Crime
The statement said a person sprinkled some inflammable liquid and lit fire on D1 Coach of Train No 16307, Alappuzha-Kannur Express, and then escaped from the coach after pulling the chain.
Police after a man allegedly set a train passenger on fire
ReporterLive
The Palakkad Division of Indian Railways has issued a press statement about the incident where a man allegedly set fire to a passenger coach in the Alappuzha-Kannur Express. The Public Relations Officer B Devadanam said in a statement that a case has been registered at the Kozhikode Railway Police station and an investigation is underway. The Railway police have invoked Sections 307 (attempt to murder), 326A (voluntarily causing grievous hurt by use of acid, etc), 436 (mischief by fire or explosive substance), 438 (punishment for the mischief committed by fire or explosive substance) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) along with 151, which pertains to damage or destruction of certain railway properties) of The Railways Act. The statement said that the Railway Divisional Control Office, on the night of April 2, “received information that a person sprinkled some inflammable liquid and lit fire on D1 Coach of Train No 16307, Alappuzha-Kannur Express and then escaped from the coach after pulling the chain. The incident resulted in burn injuries to some passengers. The train was stopped at Korappuzha Bridge near Elathur station in the Kozhikode-Kannur section,” the statement said, adding that the train restarted journey at 10.10 pm after the fire was put out. The statement also said that eight persons were admitted to the hospital with burn injuries. Three of them -  yothindranath (50), Prakashan (52) and Prince TU -  are at Kozhikode Baby Memorial Hospital, while five others - Aswathy (29), Ruby (52), Anilkumar (52), Sajisha (42), and Adwaidh (21) -  are at Kozhikode Medical College. “Three dead bodies were found near Elathur Yard - Rahimath (45), Sahara, (2) and Noufeeque. It is suspected that the deceased persons jumped out from D-1 coach of Train No. 16307 Express due to fear and panic in the aftermath of the fire incident.” The man on board the train who perpetrated the crime is absconding. Read: Man allegedly sets fire to co-passenger on train in Kerala, three found dead

Kozhikode train arson attack: Police identify suspect

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Kerala train fire
The suspect has been identified as Shaharuq Saifi, a native of Noida in Uttar Pradesh.
Kerala train incident, image from inside the train
Kerala Police, according to reports, have zeroed in on a suspect, who sprinkled petrol inside a coach and set fire to it leading to death of three persons and injuries to nine others. The condition of two passengers who suffered burn injuries are said to be critical. The bodies of three persons, including a two year-old child, who lost their lives in the incident, were found from the railway track. They had fallen off the Kannur-bound train while trying to escape the arson attack. The suspect, identified as Shahrukh Saifi is a native of Noida in UP and had been working as a labourer in the construction sector in Kozhikode. The attack happened on board D1 Coach of Train No 16307, Alappuzha-Kannur Express, at around 9.30 pm on Sunday, April 2. State police Chief Anil Kant, while speaking to media persons in the morning, had stated that they had got clues regarding the suspect. A sketch of the suspect’s face was also released by the police.  However, a senior police officer told TNM that the accused is yet to be taken into custody. The three dead bodies were found on the railway track some distance away from the Elathur Railway station, a minor station after Kozhikode. The victims have been identified as Rahmath, her niece - two-year-old Sahara - and a man named Naufeeq. Both Rahmath and Naufeeq are natives of Mattannur in Kannur. Television channels also showed visuals of a bag found on the railway track, suspected to be that of the perpetrator. The condition of Anilkumar (50), an advocate clerk, and his son Adwaith (22), who suffered burn injuries is critical. Anilkumar’s wife Sajisha (47) has also been injured. The accused came from the D1 compartment to the D2 compartment, which is a reserved coach, with two bottles of petrol. The train was stopped after someone pulled the chain on Korapuzha bridge. SIT formed A Special Investigation Team (SIT) has been formed with Crime Branch Superintendent of Police P Vikraman as the head to investigate the crime. There are 18 members in the team. Anti-Terror Squad Deputy Superintendent of Police (DySP) Baiju Paulose, Kozhikode Town Assistant Commissioner P Bijuraj and Thanur DySP VV Benny are members of the team, according to a press statement. "The investigation is being done under the direct supervision of the Inspector General (North Zone). Inspector General of Police (Kozhikode) has gone to the spot. We have got certain clues and scientific investigation is going on. We will soon be able to identify the accused and the case will be resolved soon,” state police chief Anil Kant told media persons. The Director General of Police also said that conspiracy angles would also be investigated.  

AYUSH vs Modern Medicine: What makes Kerala Public Health Bill, 2021 controversial

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Health
The Bill, in its draft form that was tabled on October 4, 2021, invited the displeasure of AYUSH practitioners as it excluded them from administrative and decision making capacities.
Representative image
Picxy.com / chaundthar
Doctors of modern medicine and AYUSH practitioners in Kerala are up in arms after the Kerala Assembly passed the Kerala Public Health Bill 2021. The Bill was passed in the House on March 21 and awaits the Governors’ assent. It has been the subject of debates between practitioners of AYUSH and of modern medicine ever since it was first tabled in 2021. The Bill was sent to a select committee which heard various stakeholders, including AYUSH practitioners. The revised Bill was submitted on March 20 and passed the following day without discussion. However, some of the issues raised by both parties still remain. The Indian Medical Association (IMA) and doctors of modern medicine oppose the inclusion of AYUSH practitioners in the Bill, while AYUSH practitioners are demanding additional powers and role in decision making, on par with their counterparts in modern medicine, within the Bill. The Kerala Public Public Health Bill is expected to “enhance administration of public health in the state,” and entrusts authorities at the state, district, and local level with the “prevention and control of emerging diseases, outbreaks of communicable diseases, and prevalence of non-communicable diseases.” Once it becomes law, the Bill will supersede the Madras Public Health Act, 1939, and the Travancore-Cochin Public Health Act, 1955, which are in place in the state right now.  The Bill, in its draft form that was tabled on October 4, 2021, invited the displeasure of AYUSH practitioners as it excluded them from administrative and decision making capacities.  What are the clauses that are mainly contested? > Scope of the definition of "Registered Medical Practitioners (RMPs)": The draft Bill allowed only “RMPs of modern medicine” to declare a person as free from any communicable disease. AYUSH practitioners across the state came together under AYUSH Aikyavedi, in order to lobby for their inclusion in the Bill. The definition of RMPs was expanded after select committee consultations to include qualified practitioners of Indian systems of medicine and homoeopathy. The IMA has raised strong objections to this change as, according to them, AYUSH systems of medicine lack the testing methodology and practices required to confirm that a person is disease-free. > Public Health Authorities (PHA) vs Public Health Committees (PHC): The draft Bill proposed PHAs at state, district, and local levels headed by modern medicine practitioners. Following the lobbying by AYUSH Aikyavedi, they were changed to PHCs at all three levels that include representatives from Indian systems of medicine and homoeopathy. Now, AYUSH practitioners are further demanding that the Secretary or any IAS-level officer from the AYUSH Department be added to the committee, as the Health Secretary, who represents modern medicine, has been included in it. TNM spoke to representatives of the IMA and practitioners of AYUSH systems of medicine to know more about the contested clauses in the Bill. IMA’s objections to the inclusion of AYUSH The Kerala chapter of IMA has issued a statement saying that they will approach the Governor, Chief Minister, and Health Minister regarding the contested clauses and explore the possibility of legal action. “While the [draft] Public Health Bill is conducive to radical improvement in Kerala’s health sector, the IMA is worried that the inclusion of officials from the AYUSH department, who have no connection with public health, in the committees will be a huge setback,” a statement issued by IMA read. “The inclusion of AYUSH department officials in the state committee and other committees, in contrast to the provisions of the draft Bill, is not acceptable. Although the Public Health Bill has introduced strong guidelines, including penal clauses to maintain clean food, drinking water, and pollution-free environment and is not confined to the health sector, the inclusion of unscientific branches of medicine in the committees may cause Kerala to take a step back,” it said. Stating that a Public Health Act is a long pending demand of the IMA and other experts working in the field, state IMA president Dr Sulphi N said that while this was a comprehensive law in the draft form, a few provisions have caused apprehensions. “Inclusion of alternative medicine practitioners is not in place anywhere in the world. Public health is a concept of modern medicine, and if alternative medical practitioners are included in the Bill, it will become an anomaly. Though they are included along with other departments like agriculture, water, sanitation, etc, alternative medicine has no role in public health. In the event of any epidemic like Nipah or COVID-19, modern medicine takes the lead. While several powers are given to public health committees in the Bill, our only apprehension is the inclusion of alternative medicine practitioners,” he said. The IMA statement said, “The certification process for very serious notifiable diseases like Nipah, COVID-19, and SARS should follow rules that reflect international standards and involve only modern medical science.” Dr GS Vijayakrishnan, president, IMA Thiruvananthapuram and former state president of Kerala Government Medical Officers’ Association (KGMOA), said the Bill proposes a change in the certification process for communicable diseases. “Earlier, only a modern medicine doctor could issue the certificate, but now a medical practitioner of any system of medicine can do the same. This becomes a problem while handling epidemics or major public health issues. For instance, modern medicine deals with COVID-19 with drugs and vaccinations, while several other systems of medicine reject vaccinations. When such a conflict arises within different systems of medicines, it becomes a threat to public health itself,” he said. Dr Ram Mohan, an Ayurveda practitioner and the state secretary of Ayurveda Medical Association of India (AMAI), was of the opinion that the Public Health Bill opens up a forum for all systems of medicine to cooperate to facilitate better public health. “When a communicable disease spreads, allopathy (modern medicine) will be needed to address the crisis first, as it is more technologically advanced. But as we saw in the case of both the Chikungunya epidemic and the COVID-19 pandemic in the state, AYUSH was able to make considerable contributions in treating long term health effects that resulted from both diseases,” he said. He further emphasised, “Each system should try to help the other, instead of seeing this as a competition. Cooperation between the systems is possible, and the Public Health Bill opens up such possibilities. What we need is a multi-system centric public health approach.” Besides this, AYUSH Aikyavedi also objected to the proposal for Public Health Authorities at the state, district, and local levels in the original Bill. The final Bill that was passed in the Assembly hence proposed Public Health Committees at all three levels, with its members including a representative each from Indian systems of medicine and homoeopathy.  “The earlier Travancore-Cochin Public Health Act required the state to have health authorities. Now, it has been changed to health committees, which will have nominees from various departments, including from agriculture, veterinary, and AYUSH,” Dr Vijayakrishnan said.  He further added that while all the alternate medicine practitioners are legally accredited, modern medicine is what conducts research and employs evidence-based medicines during public health crises. “We are not opposing any medicinal system, but our biggest concern is about the state of public health when such conflicts arise. Our only aim is to ensure that there are no public health issues in the event of epidemics or calamities, due to the tug-of-war between different systems of medicines,” he said. Dr Arif Hussain Theruvath, science communicator and an ex-homoeopath, said that though the expansion of PHAs to PHCs is an inclusive action as it now includes representatives from different medicinal systems, their presence is perceived counterproductive by those who practise modern, evidence-based medicine. “This is in view of their [AYUSH] allegiance to pseudoscientific practices and dependence on lobbying rather than on Scientific methods to incorporate AYUSH practices in treatment protocols,” he said. “As other pandemics and new epidemics are likely to break out, treatment and testing methods must be based on scientific surveillance and testing systems for public health as a whole,” the IMA statement said. Dr Arif Hussain called the Bill “an opportunity for AYUSH practitioners to become accountable. They have to come up with empirical data and prove their usefulness. As of now, they are not able to produce evidence as the systems are solely based on testimonials and anecdotes. The Bill gives AYUSH an opportunity to establish itself by complying with scientific methods and statistical evaluation.” When asked for his comment on the allegation that Ayurveda and other Indian systems are not evidence-based, Dr Ram Mohan said, “Ayurveda has been effectively practised for over 4000 years now. Is that not sufficient evidence?” He also said that the public view it as a credible system of medicine, as evidenced by the steady number of patients he receives every day. He further added, “The IMA says that Ayurveda needs to be subjected to randomised control trials (RCT) like modern medicine. But Ayurveda is not a system that can be studied through RCT in the same way that modern medicine is. It is personalised for each patient based on their age, gender, humor, physical environment, and other factors.”   Dr Ram Mohan countered the allegation that AYUSH practitioners cannot certify persons as disease-free due to the lack of scientific tests in such systems by saying that they too depend on laboratory tests and facilities like x-rays in diagnosis. He said that the aim of all medicine practitioners in the state should be to cooperate with each other to better contribute to public health.  AYUSH practitioners say their contribution cannot be negated Dr Abhil Mohan, treasurer of AYUSH Aikyavedi and general secretary of Siddha Medical Association of India said, “When the draft Bill came, we sought changes in some clauses. While many of them were addressed, the final Bill is still not satisfactory. The Public Health Bill is a crucial one. Neither the 1939 Act or the one in 1955 included AYUSH practitioners as such a department was not there back then. When a Bill is introduced in this day and age, both modern medicine and Indian systems of medicine should be given equal importance. That was our main demand.” The draft Bill spoke of Public Health Authorities, which was changed to Public Health Committees as per the demands of multiple stakeholders. He said that while the Bill contains provisions for committees, they are headed by doctors of modern medicine. “We also need a secretary-level IAS officer as a representative from the AYUSH side. The Health Department Secretary has been included as the vice chairman of the state-level committee. Similarly, AYUSH Secretary must be included, and similar to the Director of Health Services, Director of Ayurveda Medical Education should be included in the committee. There are secretaries from other departments, including agriculture, but not from AYUSH. This is a huge neglect,” he said and added that they will approach the government with detailed demands for amendments in the Bill. Regarding the IMA statement and AYUSH’s contributions to public health, he said, “AYUSH has been included in multiple hospitals and Primary Health Centres (PHCs) in other states, and also in several National and state level policies. In Kerala alone, this system is not followed. IMA is taking an extreme stance in this regard, which is not new. They have been opposing us for long. They say that we did not contribute during the pandemic, but all of us saw that the governments – both Union and state – were promoting both vaccines and AYUSH medicines simultaneously. There were clear protocols for each systems of medicine. There were multiple study reports also. They cannot deny our contributions.” Why we need a comprehensive public health Bill Besides courting controversy over the initial exclusion and later inclusion of AYUSH practitioners in the Bill, experts also believe that the Bill doesn’t address all the public health concerns that face Kerala today. The Bill is silent on mental health as a component of public health. An article in The Wire suggested that the one-health approach to public health suggested in the Bill, which focuses on “improving the social determinants of health such as clean water and environment, sanitation and waste management,” doesn’t fully address Kerala’s specific public health requirements. TNM discussed with experts what more the Bill could have incorporated to present a holistic public health approach.  Dr Vijayakrishnan called the one-health approach a welcome move, stating that public health needs to encompass everything – living and non-living – within its scope as each influences the other. “We don’t live in isolation. We have seen communicable diseases being contracted from animals. The Bill also incorporates food safety into the scope of public health, which is a good thing.” Dr Arif Hussain added, “Through this Bill, public health will be radically enhanced by developing policies rooted in evidence-based medicine. Its implementation will involve public participation through a decentralised approach, so as to abate any upcoming public health challenge, without leaving a chance to err.” However, Dr Arif Hussain pointed out some of the shortcomings of the Bill. “There are three failures that I see. One is that there is no clear reference about funding and data privacy; there is no clarity on slaughter waste and solid waste management; and lack of non-obstante clauses (upholding enforceability of a particular provision of law over another provision that is contradictory to it). Further, though there is a part that deals with communicable diseases (CD) elaborately, non-communicable diseases (NCD) are still left half attended. International treatment guidelines are to be followed not just in  CDs, but also in NCDs, to limit adverse events and attain the public health goals more effectively.”

Twist in Kerala food poisoning case: Son admits to spiking food, killing father

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Crime
After Saseendran (57) died of suspected food poisoning and other family members fell ill, his son Mayoornathan confessed to poisoning the food meant for his father.
Collage of Saseendran on the left and Mayoornathan on the right
Reporter Live/Manorama News
The death of a man in Kerala’s Thrissur due to suspected food poisoning turned out to be a case of murder. Saseendran (57), who hailed from Avanoor, died on the night of Sunday, April 2, after experiencing food poisoning symptoms. Four others, including Saseendran’s wife and 92-year-old mother, also fell ill and were admitted to the Thrissur government hospital. However, in a twist, Saseendran’s son Mayoornathan later confessed to poisoning the food to kill his father as he reportedly disliked him. On Sunday night, Saseendran stepped out of his home to run errands. He reached an ATM adjacent to the government hospital where he suddenly collapsed. While he was rushed to the hospital, he had passed away. The five people, including Saseendran, fell ill after consuming idlis for breakfast on Sunday.  Speaking to TNM, Thrissur Medical College police said that they suspected poisoning after the post mortem report came out. When they interrogated Mayoornathan, he confessed to the crime. According to reports, police suspected Mayoornathan’s involvement in the incident as he was the only one who did not fall ill after eating breakfast with his father and the others. “Though he targeted only his father, four other persons also consumed the food. They are under treatment at the hospital,” the police said.

A sleepy night train ride to horror: Eyewitness recounts scare aboard Train No 16307

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Kozhikode train fire
The police have identified the suspect in the incident as Shaharuq Saifi, a Noida native.
Kerala train arson: Eyewitness recounts scare aboard Train No 16307
Train No 16307, Alappuzha-Kannur Express, which began its journey from Alappuzha at 2.50 pm on Sunday, April 2, reached Kozhikode at around 9.10 pm. It had another three hours of run-time to reach Kannur. On most days the train would be crowded till it reaches Kozhikode. There are only a few stops between Kozhikode and Kannur and the train is usually empty by half by the time it leaves Kozhikode. It would have been another sleepy night ride for the passengers amid mostly empty seats, but shortly before it could reach the next station chaos erupted. The exact course of events is still hazy but a man walked into the D1 coach of the train, sprayed petrol on the seated passengers from two bottles he held in his hand and set fire, spreading panic. The metalic sound of the train trundling through the tracks was drowned in screams. The resulting fire spread quickly across the compartment injuring nine people. Bodies of three people, including a one-year-old child and a woman, were found on the tracks later. The police later identified the suspect as Shaharuq Saifi, a Noida native. PV Latheesh, a passenger who was travelling in the compartment, recollected that there was chaos on the train for three minutes and everyone was screaming and trying to escape. “None of us ever expected that someone would do this. This kind of an incident has never been reported.” Latheesh told Asianet News that he had seen the accused. He was wearing a shirt with check pattern in a colour similar to red. “He had two petrol bottles in his hand, I noticed that, and I suddenly thought he was about to kill himself. When he was about to open a bottle, I tried to run to another compartment, but he had splashed petrol around him, and it fell on my head also. The petrol also fell on Jyothindranadh and Prakasan (his colleagues) and other passengers," he said. Latheesh then ran past the accused in a bid to escape, while Saifi set fire to the petrol. “By that time, the fire had spread to the entire compartment. I could not see where he was going (after setting the fire). People were screaming, and it was chaotic. Everyone was trying to run and escape. I think he had only two bottles with him. I did not notice if had anything else in his hand,” he added. Latheesh’s quick thinking in running to the next compartment saved him from injuries. The train was running from the southern district of Alappuzha to the northern Kannur district. The incident happened in D1 compartment at 9.20 pm when the train had passed Kozhikode and was approaching the Elathur railway station, reported Mathrubhumi. While the police have zeroed in on the suspect, the motives behind the crime still remain unclear.

After long-delayed trial, Kerala court finds 14 guilty in tribal youth Madhu’s murder

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Attappadi Madhu Murder
The 30-year old Madhu was brutally assaulted by a group of men leading to his death in February 2018.
Madhu in Kerala's Attappadi who was lynched by a mob
Madhu
A court in Kerala's Palakkad found 14 people guilty, of the total 16 accused, in the murder of Madhu, a tribal youth from Attappadi, who was lynched in February 2018. The Special Court for SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act in Mannarkkad heard the matter on Tuesday, April 4, and the quantum of sentence will be pronounced on Wednesday. The court acquitted two accused in the case.The trial in the case began in June 2022, four years after Madhu died after being beaten up by a group of men on suspicions of stealing rice. The trial saw several twists as many of the accused turned hostile in court and two public prosecutors resigned. There were 122 witnesses in the case. The Mannarkkad court reportedly found visuals taken by the accused themselves as evidence in the case. The court found Husain, Marakkar, Shamsudheen, Aboobacker, Siddique, Ubaid, Najeeb, Jaijumon, Sajeesh, Satheesh, Sajeev, Hareesh, Biju and Muneer guilty. However, the fourth and 11 th accused Aneesh and Abdul Kareem have been acquitted. The murder of 30-year-old Madhu rocked Kerala. He belonged to the Chindakki tribal hamlet in Attappadi in Palakkad and mostly lived inside the forest. The mob accused him of stealing rice from a grocery shop and subjected him to torture and humiliation by beating up and making him walk for kilometres while tied up. Photographs of the incident soon began circulating, showing a frail Madhu, his shirt torn and hands tied up with a lungi. Another picture shows a man questioning Madhu. The pictures were uploaded on social media just before Madhu was attacked.  The mob later handed Madhu to the police, however, he died while being transported to a hospital in a police jeep. The postmortem revealed that he died of severe internal injuries.    Mahdu is survived by his mother, Mallika, and two sisters — Sarasu and Chandrika. The family faced ostracism and frustration from a long-drawn-out trial and the resignation of the public prosecutors. Read: ‘We are being ostracised’: Mother of Madhu, tribal man lynched in Kerala, tells TNM Also read: 'The job is for my brother’: Sister of Adivasi man beaten to death in Kerala becomes a cop            

‘Everyone who touched Madhu should be punished’: Tribesman witness who didn’t budge

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Attappadi Madhu murder
Of all the 17 witnesses who had secretly deposed before the court, there was only one person who did not turn hostile and it was Suresh, a relative of Madhu.
Suresh, witness in Attappadi Madhu murder case Kerala
Suresh/AsianetNewsScreenshot
Madhu, a 30-year old tribal man from the Chindakki hamlet in Attappadi was lynched by a mob in February 2018 after accusing him of stealing rice and groceries. For his family, mother Malli and sisters Chandrika and Sarasu, the five-year long legal fight was tiring as several witnesses turned hostile and two public prosecutors resigned on the course of the trial. Of all the 17 witnesses who had secretly deposed before the court, there was only one person who did not turn hostile. This was Suresh hailing from Kadukumanna hamlet in Attappadi and a relative of Madhu. The Special Court for SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act at Mannarkkad in Palakkad on Tuesday, April 4, found 14 persons out of the 16 accused, guilty. Suresh, post the verdict, said that he wanted everyone who caused physical harm to Madhu to be punished. The legal fight for Madhu, the tribal youth from Attappadi in Kerala's Palakkad district, was a unique case in many ways. Those who gave secret depositions in the case were witnesses one to 17. Suresh was the 13 th witness in the case and had seen people, who have been found guilty, physically assault Madhu at Mukkali junction, four kilometers away from Attappadi. Suresh told Asianet News that he had pressure from the accused to change his deposition. "I even thought of changing the statement (apparently out of fear). But the Palakkad SP (Superintendent of police) sir and judge sir through video conference told me not to be frightened and to give the statement courageously," he said. A secret deposition in legal parlance is the 164 statement given through section 164 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The Special Court in August last year had quashed the bail of 12 accused persons in the case owing to a prosecution request which said the accused had influenced the witnesses. Suresh also said that the accused persons offered him money to change the statement. "The offer was to me and Chandran (the eleventh witness). But he changed his statement. I am Madhu's relative too. I later gave a secret deposition honestly. I saw Madhu being kicked after being taken to Mukkali,” he added.  The accused had taken Suresh to Mannarkkad in an effort to make him change his deposition. “At that time I was not in a position to reveal anything. But they did something very bad to him. No one should have even touched him seeing how weak he was. It (the assault) could have been avoided. Now that he is gone, what is the point in telling all these. I want everyone who touched (beat) him to be convicted," he said, adding that he was afraid of facing more threats. The trial in the case began on June 8, 2022.       

Baby presumed to be stillborn left in a bucket, saved by cops and doctors

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The Kerala woman had given birth to the child in her house and arrived at the hospital, saying the child was dead and buried in her backyard.
Police officers with the drum where the baby was left
A newborn’s life was saved in Kerala’s Alappuzha, after the timely intervention of hospital staff and police on Tuesday, April 4. A woman had given birth to the child in her house and arrived at the hospital, saying the child was dead and buried in her backyard. However, they realised that the child was alive and in the house. When the police arrived at the house to check, they found the baby inside a bucket in the toilet. They rushed the infant to the hospital, where the child is currently under treatment. On Tuesday morning, a woman arrived at a private hospital in Chengannur of Alappuzha complaining of excessive bleeding and informed the doctors that the child had died. However, the woman’s son, upon questioning, informed them that the child was inside the toilet. Sharing a clip of the incident on social media, Minister for Fisheries and Chengannur MLA Saji Cherian said, “This race with a heartbeat was not in vain. The newborn baby who was thought to be dead is saved. A young woman, who is a native of Mulakuzha, arrived at a private hospital in Chengannur complaining of bleeding. She informed the doctor that the baby had died and had been buried following the delivery. But the eldest son who was with her said that the baby was in the bucket, after which the doctor informed the police. Police rushed to the hospital as soon as they came to know the information." Cherian also said, "Seeing that the baby, wrapped in a cloth, was kept inside a bucket, SI MC Abhilash ran with the bucket and the baby and was immediately taken to the hospital in a police vehicle. After giving primary care to the baby, the baby was shifted to the children's ward of Kottayam Medical College. The health condition of the baby weighing 1.3 kg is satisfactory. The baby is under observation as he is only 28 weeks old. The rapid intervention of the police and hospital authorities saved this baby's life. Congratulations.”      View this post on Instagram            A post shared by Saji Cherian (@saji__cherian)

Arson attack on Kerala train: What happened inside D1 coach

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Crime
Within 30 minutes of the attack, eight passengers were admitted to hospitals in Kozhikode. An hour later, the train resumed its journey. All was calm until the passengers realised that a woman and child were missing from the coach.
Police officers and the train where a passenger set another person on fire
On Monday, April 3, Kerala awoke to the news of an arson attack on a reserved compartment of the Alappuzha Kannur Executive Express (16307) that had taken place the previous night. Shortly after came the news of three deaths, including that of a woman and her two-year-old niece. Almost two days after the incident, the attack, the attacker, and the deaths remain shrouded in mystery. As the police and local residents try to piece together the puzzle, TNM visited Elathur, a small town in Kerala’s Kozhikode district, where the incident unfolded on Sunday night. Here is all we know about the case so far. Around 12 km north of Kozhikode city lies Elathur, with a tiny railway station where only local passenger trains stop. On the fateful Sunday of April 2, the Alappuzha Kannur Executive Express train left Kozhikode station around 9.13 pm, and crossed Elathur in 14 minutes, at full speed. According to the staff at the Elathur station, they saw the train stop around 150-200 m from the station, with some of its coaches on top of the Korapuzha bridge. Someone had pulled the emergency chain to stop the train. It was later learned that passengers had pulled it after they saw fire from one of the coaches of the train. Witness accounts state that a man on coach D1, a reserved compartment, sprayed an inflammable liquid suspected to be petrol on the passengers and lit fire. It immediately caused panic and everyone started running amok. While some passengers did not realise what was happening, some others thought the person was about to kill himself. “Nobody understood anything. They were in extreme fear and panic. None of the statements from the people in the compartment were clear. Even before they realised anything, the fire had been set,” an officer from the Railway Protection Force (RPF) told TNM. The ticket examiner on duty later said that the attacker had not booked a seat in D1. The attacker must have either been travelling without a ticket or entered D1 from another coach. Further details are unknown at the moment. More details on the attacker came out through Raziq, one of the passengers on D1. “The person wore a red shirt, and carried two bottles with him. The prime witness Raziq had seen the person standing near the lavatory when he boarded the train from Feroke,” a civil police officer from Elathur police station told TNM. “In the rush and panic that followed the fire, no one noticed the attacker,” the officer added. He is suspected to have escaped when the train stopped after the emergency chain was pulled. The rescue mission was made difficult by the fact that several of the train’s coaches were atop the Korapuzha bridge, with D1 also nearly on top, when it made the emergency stop. Within 30 minutes after the train stopped, five passengers who had burn injuries were shifted to the Government Medical College Hospital and three to the Baby Memorial Hospital in Kozhikode. A total of nine passengers, including Raziq, sustained burns in the attack. Almost an hour later, the train resumed the journey and reached Koyilandy station. All was calm until Raziq realised that his neighbours, two-year-old Zahra Bathool and her maternal aunt Rahmat, were missing from the coach. “Eye witnesses said that even though Raziq had burn injuries on his legs, he refused to go to a hospital as he was in search of the missing pair, who he had accompanied. Raziq was their neighbour in Mattannur,” a police officer said. Despite launching a search immediately, the police were unable to find the missing persons. Hours later, the loco pilot of a train that followed on the same route noticed two bodies on the track between the Korapuzha bridge and Elathur station. Upon receiving this information from the loco pilot, the police searched the area and recovered the bodies of  Zahra, her aunt Rahmat, and a third passenger who was later identified as Noufeeq, on the railway tracks. The primary findings of the postmortem indicate that the three died due to injuries to their heads, likely sustained during the fall from the moving train. There were no burn injuries on them. According to the police, the trio must have either jumped off the moving train in the panic caused by the attack or tripped and fallen while running from the fire. Zahra and Rahmat were on their way to the child’s maternal home in Kannur’s Mattannur from her house in Kozhikode’s Kadalundi. Noufeeq, a dry fish merchant who also worked at a mosque, was returning from a religious event held in Malappuram as part of Ramzan. Police also recovered a bag from the tracks, from which they found a bottle of liquid suspected to be petrol, a mobile phone, and two diaries, which contained writings in English and Hindi. The diaries also contained the names of a few places in Kerala and some personal notes. Earlier on Monday, a CCTV visual from Elathur had gone viral, allegedly of the suspect. It was later confirmed that the man in the video was not the attacker but a student who was travelling to Mangaluru. Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan issued a statement on Monday, calling the incident shocking. He ordered the constitution of a Special Investigation Team (SIT) to probe the attack. Following this, Director General of Police Anil Kant formed an 18-member SIT under Malappuram Crime Branch Superintendent of Police P Vikraman, to be supervised by Additional Director General of Police (ADGP) MR Ajith Kumar. A composite sketch of the suspect’s face, drawn on the basis of witness accounts, was released by the police on Monday. The police are tight-lipped on the details of the case and the investigation. RPF Inspector General TM Iswara Rao said, “There are certain gaps in the case. We will provide all assistance to the state police.” Police have reportedly identified the attacker as Shahrukh Saifi, a migrant labourer from Noida, Uttar Pradesh. However, ADGP Ajith Kumar told the media that the investigation is in the primary phase and that the name of the suspect has not been confirmed yet. He also said that no one has been taken into custody yet. As more details of the attack emerged over the past two days, suspicions of a terror attack were also raised. The National Investigation Agency officials visited the spot to gather information. Meanwhile, reports emerged that the Anti-Terrorist Squad of the Uttar Pradesh police apprehended a person in Bulandshahr based on a tip-off and later released him. RPF officials from Kerala had travelled to Uttar Pradesh to look into this. 

MediaOne ban lifted, SC says ‘national security’ cannot be used to deny citizens’ rights

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Court
The court has ordered the I&B Ministry to issue a renewed licence to the Malayalam news channel within four weeks.
PTI
The Supreme Court has quashed the order of the Information & Broadcasting (I&B) Ministry refusing to renew the broadcast licence of the Malayalam news channel, Media One. The apex court was hearing a plea filed by the news channel, challenging the Kerala High Court order that earlier upheld the non-renewal of the licence. A bench led by Chief Justice of India DY Chandrachud was hearing the case on Wednesday, April 5. The Ministry of Information & Broadcasting (I&B) refused to renew the licence on January 31, 2022, citing “security reasons”. The court has ordered the I&B Ministry to issue a renewed licence to the channel within four weeks. Chief Justice of India DY Chandrachud said that the Union government not disclosing the reason for withholding the licence violates the principles of natural justice. "Sealed cover procedures have curbed the right to fair and reasonable proceedings leaving appellants in the dark to fight out. The State is using the plea of national security to deny the rights of the citizens. This is incompatible with the rule of law. National security claims cannot be made out of thin air. There must be material facts backing it,” he observed. No reasonable person will come to the conclusion that the action against MediaOne was in the interest of national security, the CJI said. “Sealed cover procedure cannot be introduced to cover harms that cannot be remedied by public immunity proceedings. The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) relied on reports of the channel on issues like CAA, NRC, criticism of judiciary, state, etc., to state that it is anti-establishment. We don't think these are justifiable grounds,” he observed. Adding that the press has a duty to speak truth to power, he added that “the critical views of the channel against the government policies cannot be termed as anti-establishment. This view presumes that the press should always support the government. An independent press is necessary for a robust democracy.” CJI Chandrachud also added that the unreasonable orders of the I&B Ministry, without disclosing the reasons behind the ban, has infringed the right to fair hearing to Madhyamam Broadcasting Limited. “The non-renewal of a license for a channel is a restriction on the right to freedom of speech and can be imposed only on grounds under Article 19(2),” he said and added that the alleged link made between shareholders of the channel and Jamaat-e-Islami Hind was not a legitimate ground to restrict the rights of the channel, and there was no evidence to prove the link. The channel, owned by Madhyamam Broadcasting Limited, was taken off air by the Union government and its telecast was banned on security grounds on January 31, 2022. The Supreme Court was hearing a plea by the channel challenging the Kerala High Court’s order that upheld the ban upon the channel. The apex court, on March 15, had stayed the Union government’s order revoking the security clearance for the channel, and sought the Union government to provide reasons for the decision. The Union government had earlier informed the apex court that the denial of security clearance was based on intelligence inputs, which are "sensitive" and "secret in nature". The reasons for denial were not disclosed by the Ministry of Home Affairs as it was a matter of policy and in the interest of security of the state and its establishments. Following the Union government withholding its licence, MediaOne TV went off air on January 31. The Kerala High Court, on March 2, upheld the single-judge order to ban MediaOne TV. The latter then moved the Supreme Court against the Kerala High Court’s order.

‘Zahra had just learnt to speak fluently’: Kerala arson attack victim’s father

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Kerala Train Fire
A prayer ceremony was going on at Zahra's house when TNM reached there on Tuesday. While the congregation chanted for her little soul, six-year-old Aysha, Zahra’s elder sister, was staring at the Imam.
Shuhaib and Zahra
Two-year-old Zahra had just started to speak fluently when her father Shuhaib Saquafi left for Madeena to perform Umrah (an Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca) in the last week of March. Six days later, on April 3, an early morning from his home in Kadalundi of Kerala’s Kozhikode district brought news of the death of his daughter. Zahra died along with her aunt Rahmath, after they fell from the Alappuzha Kannur Executive Express on board which an arson attack had caused panic on the night of Sunday, April 2.  A prayer ceremony was going on at Zahra's house when TNM reached there on Tuesday. While the congregation chanted for her soul, six-year-old Aysha, Zahra’s elder sister, was staring at the Imam. Her mother Jaseela did not come out of her room.  Speaking to TNM from his house in Kadalundi, Shuhaib, who is also a religious preacher, said,“I enjoyed her talks for only a week before I left for Umrah. When I heard about the tragedy, I rushed back home and saw her for one last time.” Zahra had left home after 8.00 pm on April 2 with her aunt Rahmath Manikoth to her maternal home in Mattannur of Kannur. “It had been a while since her grandmother from Mattannur expressed her wish to meet Zahra. My wife was attending a 19-day training (Zahrathul Quran, an Islamic preschool) as she is a teacher at Markaz Public School. So my wife’s elder sister came to pick up Zahra,” Shuhaib said.  Shuhaib, Zahra's father He recalled that they had been planning to take little Zahra to Mattannur for a while. “Finally, it happened on that dreadful day. She was very happy to be leaving on a journey. Moreover, she loved staying at Mattannur and she considered her aunt also as her mother. At least my daughter is not alone, she went with her favourite person,” he said. April 6 is Zahra’s maternal grandfather Abdul Rahman’s seventh death anniversary, which was why Rahmath had decided to take Zahra to Mattannur in the week before that. Rahmath, Zahra, and Raziq, a neighbour who accompanied them, boarded the train around 8.50 pm from Feroke railway station. The mishap happened around 30 minutes later, near the Elathur railway station. According to the police, when the attacker sprayed the inflammable liquid in the D1 coach of the train, everyone ran amok. In the ensuing panic, Rahmath, Zahra, and a third passenger identified as Noufeeq, might have jumped or slipped from the running train. As per the preliminary analysis of the postmortem, the three died by hitting their head. “We (religious preachers) are not supposed to grieve, we need to console others. But there are times when we lose it. We are still trying to cope with our loss. I was more worried about Jaseela, but she has also come to terms with it, through spiritual ways,” Shuhaib added.

Train arson attack: Suspect nabbed from Maharashtra, to be brought to Kerala

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Kozhikode train fire
Kerala State Police Chief Anil Kant said the suspected accused has been taken into custody by the Maharashtra police with help from central agencies.
Kozhikode train fire accused
The person in custody
A suspect in the arson attack onboard a moving train near Kozhikode on Sunday night has been taken into custody by the Maharashtra police on the night of April 4, according to reports. Three people who fell off the train while trying to escape from the fire had died and eight others were injured following the attack. The suspect had sprinkled petrol on the seated passengers of the D1 coach of the Kannur-Alappuzha Executive train on April 2, leading to widespread panic. Kerala State Police Chief Anil Kant said the suspected accused has been taken into custody by the Maharashtra police with help from central agencies. “It was a combined effort by the Special Investigation Team constituted by us.He’ll be brought back to Kerala. I am in touch with the Maharashtra DGP. Further details on the interrogation will be shared with the media at an appropriate time,” said Anil Kant.   The suspect was arrested from a hospital at Ratnagiri in Maharashtra while trying to escape according to reports by multiple television channels, which also flashed the pictures of a person with burn injuries on face, said to have been inflicted while trying to escape after committing the crime. The Kerala Police, which is investigating the crime, had earlier released the sketch of a suspect.  Police had recovered a bag containing documents and notebook related to a person identified as Shahrukh Saifi from the crime spot. There was no confirmation from the police whether the person apprehended in Maharashtra was the same person they were on the lookout for.  Earlier reports had identified Saifi as a native of Noida in Uttar Pradesh. A Special Investigation Team (SIT) with Crime Branch Superintendent of Police P Vikraman as the head has been set up to probe the crime. The team has 18 members. The Railway Police which registered a case is also probing the incident.  The attack happened after the train left Kozhikode railway station at around 9.20 pm. According to an eye witness, the attacker had two bottles of petrol with him which he sprinkled on passengers.             

Lynching of tribesman Madhu: 7-year rigorous imprisonment for 13 accused

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Attapadi Madhu case
They have been found guilty of culpable homicide not amounting to murder under section 304 (ii) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC).
Madhu, tribal man who was lynched by a mob in Kerala.
A Special Court at Mannarkkad in Palakkad district of Kerala on April 5, Wednesday, sentenced 13 accused to rigorous imprisonment of seven years in the lynching of tribal youth Madhu. The Special Court for Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe (Prevention of Atrocities) Act had found 14 out of the total 16 accused guilty on Tuesday while acquitting two. They have been found guilty of culpable homicide not amounting to murder under section 304 (ii) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC).  Muneer, the 16th accused,  was found guilty under 352, for assaulting or using criminal force, under the IPC.  All those who have been convicted, except Muneer, have been sentenced to imprisonment by the court. Hussain, the first accused, has been ordered to pay Rs 1,05,000 as fine. All other convicted, except Muneer have to pay Rs 1,18,000 as fine. For Muneer, the sentence is three months imprisonment and a fine of Rs 500 as he was not charged with homicide. The other accused are Marakkar, Shamsudheen, Aboobacker, Siddique, Ubaid, Najeeb, Jaijumon, Sajeesh, Satheesh, Sajeev, Hareesh and Biju. The persons who were acquitted are the fourth accused Aneesh and 11 th accused Abdul Kareem. The court has also directed to take action against the witnesses in the case who turned hostile. A total of 24 witnesses had turned hostile during the course of the trial.  Madhu, who belonged to Kadukumanna tribal hamlet in Attappady died after being subjected to physical assault by a mob on February 22, 2018. Visuals of a group of men assaulting him after tying his hands with a lungi at Mukkali junction near Attappadi was widely circulated and became crucial evidence for the prosecution. The mob who assaulted him had accused him of stealing rice and groceries The image of a helpless, weak Madhu in the visuals was a shock to the social consciousness of the state. The trial began in June 2022. The accused persons are residents of Mukkali and nearby regions. The trial faced setbacks after several witnesses turned hostile and two public prosecutors resigned. For the family of Madhu, his mother Malli and sisters Sarasu and Chandrika the legal fight had been tough and they even faced ostracism over the years.  
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